The big cat pounced on Kate Drew from behind and dragged her to the ground, sinking its teeth into the back of her neck.
As wardens on a Zimbabwe game reserve rushed to help, the 400lb lion kept the 28-year-old tourist firmly in its grip - but, mercifully, its jaws just missed her brain stem.
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Recalling the attack just over a month ago, Miss Drew, from Hornchurch, Essex, said she assumed she was a "goner" after the lion pounced.
As it held her down, she was even more terrified to glance up and see two more lions coming her way.
She was saved only when the wardens rushed in with sticks and wrestled the animal away.
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The closeness of her brush with death sank in only after Miss Drew saw these photographs of the attack, taken by a fellow traveller.
"It brings back just what a crazy experience it was," she said.
"It's quite shocking to see a picture of it."
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As part of the trip, they visited a project where lions are bred to be released back into the wild.
Tourists can pay £24 to walk with several of the big cats, which are considered tame enough to be allowed contact with humans.
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"I was scared enough when he pinned me to the ground, but when I looked up and saw the other two, I really thought I'd had it. I thought, 'Oh my God, I'm a goner'."
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